Chetelat v. Kelter
Chetelat v. Kelter
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee (plaintiff below) brought this suit against appellant, alleging that on the 18th day of November, 1891, she was the owner of seven head of cows, heifers, etc., and that on that date appellant forcibly and violently took them from the possession of such plaintiff in the county of Huerfano, and converted them to his own use; alleging the value to have been $250, asking judgment for $500. Defendant answered : First, denying generally the allegations of the complaint; second, admitting the taking, and alleging that on January 7, 1892, one Frink obtained a judgment of $24.81 against appellee and John Kelter in the county court of Custer ; that an execution was issued and placed in his hands as sheriff of such county ; that he levied it upon the cattle in controversy, advertised and sold them, and applied the proceeds upon the judgment. It'will be observed that the alleged taking was on November 18,1891, and the attempted justification on an execution issued upon a judgment obtained January 7, 1892; consequently there was no justification pleaded, and the only issues formed were those by the general denial. The case was tried to a jury, the defense being
The question to be determined was whether there was valid service of the summons and a valid levy of attachment in the case of Frink against appellee and John Kelter, without which the county court of Custer county was without jurisdiction, and its judgment void. Appellant, aware of the illegality of his own extraterritorial acts, and the necessity of establishing valid service to shield himself in this case, resorts to a course unparalleled in rascality in the records of judicial proceedings. First. We have a certificate and sworn return of one Graves Benson that he was deputy sheriff of Huerfano county, and as such he served the writs of sumrpons and the attachment, and took the cattle on the 18th day of November. It was signed in his own name, and did not purport to have been done in the name of the sheriff. Second. On the 14th day of February, 1893, — five months after this suit was instituted, and over a year after appellant had made his official return to the execution, — application was made to the county
George Dick was called in rebuttal, and testified: That on the 18th of November, 1891, he was sheriff of Huerfano county. That Graves Benson was not at that or any other time his deputy. That Samuel Jacks was his deputy, but served no papers in the case, made no levy upon the cattle, and was in no way connected with it. That he (Dick) served no papers, made no levy, and knew nothing of the case until long afterwards. Admitted the falsity of the return by him made and gave a history or explanation of it. In July or August, 1893, he received a letter from McFeeley, counsel for appellant, inclosing copies of application and the required return, asking him to sign and return them. That he consulted his attorney, and was advised not to do it. Declined by letter, stating that it would be an unlawful act. That he had nothing to do with the cattle, and knew nothing
That there was no service of either summons or attachment in the Frink Case is clearly established. The county court of Custer county had no jurisdiction of defendants, or, by attachment, of property, and the proceedings were absolutely void.
Complaint is made by counsel of appellant of the instructions given and refused by the court. Those given fully embrace-the law of the case, and are in no way legally objectionable. Those prayed by the defendant were properly refused. The first required the court to instruct the jury that the sheriff of Huerfano county took the property under a valid writ of attachment; that it (the jury) should disregard all the evidence introduced by plaintiff, and find for the defendant. The second required the jury, if it found for the defendant, to set the amount for which the property sold under the pretended execution. The third, to find. for the defendant. Comment upon them is unnecessary. The judgment of the district court will be affirmed, only regretting its inadequacy, under the circumstances, to afford compensation.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.